A Response to Eugene and Kiyo’s Dialogue-Disagreement on Dialogic Pedagogy

Main Article Content

Beth Ferholt

Abstract

Thank you for asking me to respond to the text that you have created, Eugene and Kiyo. I will write about the “freedom from,” which Eugene raises and which Kiyo addresses at the end of the text. Kiyo points out that when the teacher’s primary active engagement with the learner is to respect the learner’s freedom from, then ‘engaging with others actively to facilitate their learning and the development of their agency’ (pedagogy itself) is hindering the development of self-generated authorship (or making people responsive).

Article Details

How to Cite
Ferholt, B. (2014). A Response to Eugene and Kiyo’s Dialogue-Disagreement on Dialogic Pedagogy. Dialogic Pedagogy: A Journal for Studies of Dialogic Education, 2. https://doi.org/10.5195/dpj.2014.125
Section
Special Issue: Dialogue on Dialogic Pedagogy
Author Biography

Beth Ferholt, Brooklyn COllege, City University of New York

Assistant Prof., Department of Early Childhood and Art Education